This commit introduces "WatcherCommunicator" struct that
is used facilitate bi-directional communication between CLI
file watcher and the watched function.
Prerequisite for https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/20876
This brings in [`display`](https://github.com/rgbkrk/display.js) as part
of the `Deno.jupyter` namespace.
Additionally these APIs were added:
- "Deno.jupyter.md"
- "Deno.jupyter.html"
- "Deno.jupyter.svg"
- "Deno.jupyter.format"
These APIs greatly extend capabilities of rendering output in Jupyter
notebooks.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This fixes #20767.
We were losing `this` and then when an exception was happening, it
didn't show up in the output because we weren't bubbling up exceptions
from within a user defined function for displaying. I thought about
doing a `.call(object)` but didn't want to get in the way of a bound
`this` that a user or library was already putting on the function.
Adds `buffers` to the `Deno.jupyter.broadcast` API to send binary data
via comms. This affords the ability to send binary data via websockets
to the jupyter widget frontend.
This makes `CliNpmResolver` a trait. The terminology used is:
- **managed** - Deno manages the node_modules folder and does an
auto-install (ex. `ManagedCliNpmResolver`)
- **byonm** - "Bring your own node_modules" (ex. `ByonmCliNpmResolver`,
which is in this PR, but unimplemented at the moment)
Part of #18967
Closes #20535.
# Screenshots
## JSON
<img width="779" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/denoland/deno/assets/836375/668bb1a6-3f76-4b36-974e-cdc6c93f94c3">
## Vegalite
<img width="558" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/denoland/deno/assets/836375/a5e70908-6b87-42d8-85c3-1323ad52a00f">
# Implementation
Instead of going the route of recursively getting all the objects under
`application/.*json` keys, I went with `JSON.stringify`ing in denospace
then parsing it from rust. One of the key benefits of serializing and
deserializing is that non-JSON-able entries will get stripped
automatically. This also keeps the code pretty simple.
In the future we should _only_ do this for `application/.*json` keys.
cc @mmastrac
"Fixes" the exception display issue of #20524 on older versions of
Jupyter that required `evalue` to be truthy. For now, until we can do
proper processing of the `ExceptionDetails` this will make Jupyter
Notebook 6.5.1 and below happy.
This is the alternative "just work now" PR to #20530
This commit adds "deno jupyter" subcommand which
provides a Deno kernel for Jupyter notebooks.
The implementation is mostly based on Deno's REPL and
reuses large parts of it (though there's some clean up that
needs to happen in follow up PRs). Not all functionality of
Jupyter kernel is implemented and some message type
are still not implemented (eg. "inspect_request") but
the kernel is fully working and provides all the capatibilities
that the Deno REPL has; including TypeScript transpilation
and npm packages support.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/13016
---------
Co-authored-by: Adam Powers <apowers@ato.ms>
Co-authored-by: Kyle Kelley <rgbkrk@gmail.com>
### What
Skip writing files from the template if the files already exist in the
project directory.
### Why
When I run deno init in a directory that already has a main.ts, or one
of the other template files, I usually want to initialize a workspace
around a file I've started working in. A hard error in this case seems
counter productive. An informational message about what's being skipped
seems sufficient.
Close #20433
Previously:
```rust
pub struct TestDefinition {
pub id: String,
pub name: String,
pub range: SourceRange,
pub steps: Vec<TestDefinition>,
}
pub struct TestDefinitions {
pub discovered: Vec<TestDefinition>,
pub injected: Vec<lsp_custom::TestData>,
pub script_version: String,
}
```
Now:
```rust
pub struct TestDefinition {
pub id: String,
pub name: String,
pub range: Option<Range>,
pub is_dynamic: bool, // True for 'injected' module, not statically detected but added at runtime.
pub parent_id: Option<String>,
pub step_ids: HashSet<String>,
}
pub struct TestModule {
pub specifier: ModuleSpecifier,
pub script_version: String,
pub defs: HashMap<String, TestDefinition>,
}
```
Storing the test tree as a literal tree diminishes the value of IDs,
even though vscode stores them that way. This makes all data easily
accessible from `TestModule`. It unifies the interface between
'discovered' and 'injected' tests. This unblocks some enhancements wrt
syncing tests between the LSP and extension, such as this TODO:
61f08d5a71/client/src/testing.ts (L251-L259)
and https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/900. We should also
get more flexibility overall.
`TestCollector` is cleaned up, now stores a `&mut TestModule` directly
and registers tests as it comes across them with
`TestModule::register()`. This method ensures sanity in the redundant
data from having both of `TestDefinition::{parent_id,step_ids}`.
All of the messy conversions between `TestDescription`,
`LspTestDescription`, `TestDefinition`, `TestData` and `TestIdentifier`
are cleaned up. They shouldn't have been using `impl From` and now the
full list of tests is available to their implementations.
The motivation is If I'm using deno lint --rules, I want to see all the
rules especially the one that have no tags, since the recommend ones are
already active
This change also prints the tags associated with the rule inline.
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2. Ensure there is a related issue and it is referenced in the PR text.
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As the title.
---------
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
Disables `BenchContext::start()` and `BenchContext::end()` for low
precision benchmarks (less than 0.01s per iteration). Prints a warning
when they are used in such benchmarks, suggesting to remove them.
```ts
Deno.bench("noop", { group: "noops" }, () => {});
Deno.bench("noop with start/end", { group: "noops" }, (b) => {
b.start();
b.end();
});
```
Before:
```
cpu: 12th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-12900K
runtime: deno 1.36.2 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu)
file:///home/nayeem/projects/deno/temp3.ts
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
noop 2.63 ns/iter 380,674,131.4 (2.45 ns … 27.78 ns) 2.55 ns 4.03 ns 5.33 ns
noop with start and end 302.47 ns/iter 3,306,146.0 (200 ns … 151.2 µs) 300 ns 400 ns 400 ns
summary
noop
115.14x faster than noop with start and end
```
After:
```
cpu: 12th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-12900K
runtime: deno 1.36.1 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu)
file:///home/nayeem/projects/deno/temp3.ts
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
noop 3.01 ns/iter 332,565,561.7 (2.73 ns … 29.54 ns) 2.93 ns 5.29 ns 7.45 ns
noop with start and end 7.73 ns/iter 129,291,091.5 (6.61 ns … 46.76 ns) 7.87 ns 13.12 ns 15.32 ns
Warning start() and end() calls in "noop with start and end" are ignored because it averages less than 0.01s per iteration. Remove them for better results.
summary
noop
2.57x faster than noop with start and end
```